World’s largest pension fund loses $136 billion

If you’ve read Notes recently, you know the pension fund crisis is one of our major themes. Simply put, these giant pools of capital responsible for paying out retirement benefits to workers are BROKE.

According to the World Economic Forum, pension funds around the world are short around $70 TRILLION. State, federal and local pensions in the US are $7 trillion short… and a recent report by Boston College estimates 25% of private US pensions will go broke in the next decade.

This is all happening because investment returns have been too low.

Pension funds need to earn about 8% per year to meet their obligations. And they traditionally do that with a conservative mix of bonds and stocks.

But with interest rates near the lowest levels ever, it’s impossible for pension funds to achieve that 8% with their usual tools (over the past year, they’ve only been earning around 5.5%).

And, across the board, pensions are taking on WAY more risk in hopes of breaking even…

Since 2008, public pensions have increased their allocation to risky assets by 10%.

10% may not sound like much, but it’s a huge move by these conservative funds.

It translates into TRILLIONS more invested in exotic speculative investments.

So while the teachers and firefighters of the world are counting on pensions to conservatively invest their retirement savings, they’re trying to flip speculative real estate to juice returns (that strategy has actually increased sixfold).

Pensions are broke. They know that they will not earn enough money to pay their obligations. So they’re swinging for the fences. They don’t have another choice.

Sure, piling into risk assets has juiced returns for the past decade. But we’re now 10 years into the longest bull market in history. And basically everything is expensive today (particularly stocks and real estate).

So pensions can’t count on the same kind of returns into the future…

Ray Dalio, manager of the world’s largest hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, expects 10-year returns for a conservative US portfolio of stocks and bonds to be around 3% per year. Or in his own words, “low returns for a long time.”

But pension plans are doing the exact opposite. They’re going all in on risk assets at the top… because they have no other choice.

And they are completely unprepared for what’s coming.

Pension plans themselves expect to earn 7.4% per year for the foreseeable future (already a full 60 basis points below what they require).

Their worst-case scenario return is 5.4% a year… I don’t know what their worst case looks like. But considering the potential for trade wars, a global slowdown, political infighting, nuclear war… 5.4% seems outright rosy.

There’s a high probability we see stocks plunge 40-60% this year or next. But pensions are living in some parallel universe where they’ll continue to earn 5% a year.

Of course, gambling the savings of regular working people at market highs will only lead to one thing… catastrophic losses.

If you want proof of that, look at what happened in Japan last week, home to the world’s largest pension fund. Its Government Pension Investment Fund lost $136 billion dollars in just 3 months.

The reason? A massive drop in the value of stocks and other “risky assets” (sounds familiar…?).

That’s the worst rate of decline the fund has ever experienced.

Now, it would be naive not to expect to see similar scenarios in other parts of the world over the next years, because the problems are the same…

Pension fund managers are oblivious to reality… and this is how they gamble the savings of generations of workers.

The authors of the Boston College report conclude that these ludicrous estimates “could yield required contributions that are ultimately inadequate to meet benefit obligations and, thus, threaten the financial stability of public plans”

The contributions workers pay into the system are based on these unrealistic, overly optimistic numbers that have no way in the world of ever happening.

Which means millions of workers counting on that money for retirement will never be paid.

It’s clear as day: pensions are broke. The money they promised simply won’t be there.

That’s why we think it’s critical you take things into your own hands.

As an individual investor, you have options big pension funds don’t have – like investing in loans backed by assets (like wine, gold or real estate).

Or you can simply sit on cash and earn 2% while you wait for the correction to go bargain shopping.

And where things are today, we think these options make a lot of sense.

About the Author

Simon Black is an international investor, entrepreneur, and founder of Sovereign Man. His free daily e-letter Notes from the Field is about using the experiences from his life and travels to help you achieve more freedom, make more money, keep more of it, and protect it all from bankrupt governments.